Comparing DAPSA, DAPSA28 and DAS28-CRP in patients with psoriatic arthritis initiating a first TNF-inhibitor across nine European countries

Louise Linde*, Stylianos Georgiadis, Lykke M Ørnbjerg, Simon H Rasmussen, Brigitte Michelsen, Johan Askling, Daniela Di Giuseppe, Johan K Wallman, Jakub Závada, Karel Pavelka, Miguel Bernardes, Carolina O Matos, Bente Glintborg, Anne Gitte Loft, Dan Nordström, Laura Kuusalo, Burkhard Möller, Michael J Nissen, Catalin Codreanu, Corina MogosanBjorn Gudbjornsson, Thorvardur Jon Love, Cansu Akleylek, Florenzo Iannone, Tore K Kvien, Ziga Rotar, Isabel Castrejon, Gary J Macfarlane, Merete L Hetland, Mikkel Østergaard

*Corresponding author for this work

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Because 66/68 joint counts are not always performed in routine care, we aimed to determine which of the modified 28-joint disease activity index for psoriatic arthritis (DAPSA28) or 28-joint disease activity score with C-reactive protein (DAS28-CRP) should be preferred for monitoring disease activity in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) when the original DAPSA (66/68 joints) is not available.

METHODS: Prospectively collected real-world data of European bionaive patients with PsA initiating a first tumor necrosis factor inhibitor were pooled. Remission and response status were evaluated at 6 months by remission (DAPSA ≤ 4, DAPSA28 ≤ 4, and DAS28-CRP < 2.6), response (75% improvement for DAPSA and DAPSA28), and combined EULAR good/moderate responses for DAS28-CRP. Logistic regression analyses on multiple imputed data were used to identify baseline predictors.

RESULTS: Remission and response cohorts included 3,159 and 1,866 patients, respectively. The 6-month proportions achieving remission/response were DAPSA (27%/44%), DAPSA28 (28%/44%), and DAS28-CRP (59%/80%). Of 14 possible baseline predictors, 11 predicted both DAPSA and DAPSA28 remission (8 of which also predicted their response, indicated by "*"): longer disease duration*, male sex*, and higher CRP* were positive, whereas older age*, higher body mass index*, patient fatigue*, and global, physician global, health assessment questionnaire score*, and tender and swollen* joint counts were negative predictors. Eight and five of these predicted DAS28-CRP remission and response, respectively.

CONCLUSION: In patients with PsA, DAPSA28 should be preferred over DAS28-CRP as a substitute for DAPSA when 66/68 joint counts are not available because of the large overlap in remission and response status and in predictors between DAPSA and DAPSA28.

Original languageEnglish
JournalArthritis Care & Research
ISSN2151-464X
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Jun 2024

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